The Record (Troy, NY)

Opening schools a tough decision

- Alan Chartock is professor emeritus at the State University of New York, publisher of the Legislativ­e Gazette and president and CEO of the WAMC Northeast Public Radio Network. Readers can email him at alan@wamc.org.

I know that I wouldn’t want to be governor of New York or frankly, any other politician.

I once told Andrew Cuomo’s father, Mario, that I thought many people must be indebted to him, using judicial appointmen­ts to make my point. He sarcastica­lly responded that you end up with twelve people who hate your guts because you didn’t appoint them and one ingrate. I (complain) when I get hate mail so I can only imagine what Andrew Cuomo has to put up with.

You can only make a decision based on the best informatio­n that you have at the time and it may well be imperfect. You have to look no further than Andrew’s earlier pronouncem­ents about nursing homes to see what I mean.

Now we are dealing with the issue of letting our kids to go back to school.

About a week ago, Cuomo made some news with me on the radio when he said that if the positivity rate on COVID-19 stays as low as it currently is, schools can reopen. Cuomo must know, as we all do, that sooner or later a child will come down with the virus and the cheap shot artists, some of whom are in the press, will be all over him, characteri­zing him as a near murderer.

But just put yourself in his place. What would you have done?

There really are no good answers. Many families have two parents, working to put food on the table. Many have one. If no one is at home to take care of the kids, there can be real trouble, up to and including violation of the child abandonmen­t laws and tragedies like a kid burning down the house because he or she was playing with matches.

But what about that food on the table?

Even if we were to buy the possibilit­y of on- line instructio­n as part of the solution, we surely recognize that not every kid has access to a computer and even if there is one in a house, there may be more than one child needing to use it. Caregivers lacking in language or computer skills, even if they are at home, may have trouble helping the child manage the computer.

Once again, we see the inevitable and increasing differenti­al between the haves and the have nots. You don’t need me to spell it out.

Andrew Cuomo is in the enviable position of having guided the state to where we find ourselves today: we have f lattened the curve and our rates of positivity are excellent. From having the highest number of COVID-19 cases in the country, we are now in a relatively good place. Unlike so many other states, our decision will be much easier than, say, California, Texas and Florida.

In fact, some of the red state governors and followers of the maddening ideas of Donald Trump will send their kids back to school, often in the charge of adults who will have or who will get the virus. The problem, of course, is that despite the fact that we say that politics should not play any role in making these kind of decisions, it inevitably does.

We know that Donald Trump wants to reopen the schools and the economy, no matter the cost in terms of lives. He sees this as his only path to reelection and so, no matter what the data and the science tell us, he will put our children at risk. I don’t have to tell you what happens to mothers and fathers and grandparen­ts if a child dies because of a politician’s agenda.

Cuomo is lucky. New Yorkers have risen to the challenge and done what was asked of them. People wear masks and socially distance and so far, unlike California and Florida, we have f lattened the curve. Cuomo gets a lot of credit for that.

Neverthele­ss, the guy has to lose sleep over the potential for even more disaster down the road.

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 ??  ?? Alan Chartock Capitol Connection
Alan Chartock Capitol Connection

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